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Health rights groups demand massive overhaul of India’s 'coercive' HPV vaccine policy

By A Representative 
Amid the ongoing implementation of India's national Human Papillomavirus vaccination programme, a coalition of prominent public health and rights organisations has issued an urgent directive to the central and state governments, demanding a fundamental overhaul of the current immunization strategy. 
The National Alliance of People's Movements, acting in tandem with the All-India Feminist Alliance and the National Health Rights Forum, has formally presented a comprehensive 10-point demand charter that pushes for an ethical, gender-neutral, and people-centred national policy. The alliance insists that while cervical cancer remains an indisputable public health crisis in India, killing an estimated 80,000 women annually from predominantly impoverished and rural areas, the current preventive rollout must be grounded in transparency, voluntary participation, and rigorous scientific oversight.
​The collective statement highlights major structural anxieties regarding the ethics and efficacy of the nationwide campaign, which rolled out in late February 2026 to administer vaccines to adolescent girls. While acknowledging the broad global scientific consensus supporting the vaccine's safety and effectiveness since 2006, the civil groups cite deep concerns over informed consent, the coercive nature of target-driven approaches, and a general lack of transparency in government decision-making. 
Recalling documented violations during a 2009 demonstration project where institutional authorities signed off on vaccinations for rural and adivasi girls instead of their parents, the charter warns that India lacks sufficient evidence of strengthened consent procedures. Furthermore, they criticize the current school-centric administration model, arguing it actively risks excluding a massive demographic of out-of-school girls from marginalized and vulnerable communities who are already disconnected from public health channels.
​At the core of the 10-point charter is a push back against what the organizations term the coercive imposition of targets on essential frontline health workers. The alliance reports that ground-level personnel, including ASHAs, ANMs, and school teachers, are being subjected to threats of disciplinary action and intense performance pressures to meet administrative quotas. They demand an immediate de-linking of the immunization drive from punitive measures, calling instead for proper training, institutional support, and fair remuneration for these predominantly rural women workers. 
To safeguard the public, the charter calls for the deployment of a robust, independent surveillance system for Adverse Events Following Immunization, including dedicated 24-hour helplines and rapid response medical teams at the district level, with an emphasis that all safety data be made public on a monthly basis.
​The civil rights groups have also raised sharp questions regarding corporate influence and the economic sustainability of the drive, pointing out that the government has opted for Gardasil—manufactured by multinational pharmaceutical company Merck—while bypassing the indigenously developed, cost-effective vaccine alternative, Cervavac. They argue this lack of fiscal transparency threatens to place an unnecessary financial burden on India’s already underfunded and understaffed public healthcare system. 
Additionally, the charter demands a shift away from policies that focus exclusively on females, arguing that targeting only adolescent girls mimics outdated family planning frameworks, reinforces cultural prejudices that paint women’s bodies as the sole carriers of disease, and leaves men unaccountable and unprotected against HPV-related penile, anal, and throat cancers.
​To resolve these interconnected systemic flaws, the alliance demands that the government broaden the eligible vaccination bracket to include both boys and girls between the ages of 9 and 14, standardizing a globally accepted two-dose protocol. They emphasize that any vaccination policy must be paired with an extensive, multi-lingual public education campaign addressing wider risk factors such as personal hygiene, early marriages, and multiple child births. 
Crucially, the public health bodies underscore that vaccination cannot act as a standalone silver bullet. They are calling for an integrated, multi-dimensional national strategy that explicitly connects the vaccine drive to enhanced, state-funded cervical screening services—including Pap smears and HPV DNA testing—backed by assured, affordable, and immediate treatment pathways for anyone diagnosed with pre-cancerous lesions.

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